People trust legal advice generated by ChatGPT more than a lawyer—new study
- A study conducted with 288 participants tested willingness to act on legal advice from ChatGPT and lawyers across three experiments.
- Participants often favored AI advice when unaware of its source, reflecting a key finding about reliance on AI-generated legal guidance.
- LLMs used more complex language and offered concise answers, while lawyers used simpler, more verbose responses, possibly influencing preferences.
- Participants scored 0.59 at distinguishing AI from human advice, slightly better than chance but indicating weak ability overall.
- The study highlights the need for improved AI literacy and regulation to ensure responsible use and verification of AI legal advice with human experts.
11 Articles
11 Articles
People Trust Legal Advice Generated By ChatGPT More Than A Lawyer In New Study
People who aren’t legal experts are more willing to rely on legal advice provided by ChatGPT than by real lawyers – at least, when they don’t know which of the two provided the advice. The post People Trust Legal Advice Generated By ChatGPT More Than A Lawyer In New Study appeared first on Study Finds.
People trust legal advice generated by ChatGPT more than a lawyer—new study
People who aren't legal experts are more willing to rely on legal advice provided by ChatGPT than by real lawyers—at least, when they don't know which of the two provided the advice. That's the key finding of our new research, which highlights some important concerns about the way the public increasingly relies on AI-generated content. We also found the public has at least some ability to identify whether the advice came from ChatGPT or a human …
People trust legal advice generated by ChatGPT more than a lawyer – new study
Alexander Supertramp / shutterstockPeople who aren’t legal experts are more willing to rely on legal advice provided by ChatGPT than by real lawyers – at least, when they don’t know which of the two provided the advice. That’s the key finding of our new research, which highlights some important concerns about the way the public increasingly relies on AI-generated content. We also found the public has at least some ability to identify whether the…
Legal advice from AI remains risky. And yet, according to a study, legal laymen tend to listen to AI rather than to real lawyers – at least on one condition. read more on t3n.de
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